Home » Ukraine peace summit fails to persuade major non-aligned countries to sign final statement

Ukraine peace summit fails to persuade major non-aligned countries to sign final statement

Ukraine peace summit fails to persuade major non-aligned countries to sign final statement

Western countries attending a peace summit in Switzerland have denounced Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but have fallen short of persuading major non-aligned states to join their final statement. 

More than 90 countries attended the two-day talks at a Swiss Alpine resort at the behest of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the weekend. 

The event was billed as a “peace summit” even though Moscow was not invited. 

Russia ridiculed the event from afar. A decision by China to stay away all but assured that the summit would fail to achieve Ukraine’s goal of persuading major countries from the “global south” to join in isolating Russia.

More than 90 nations attended the summit. (Reuters: Urs Flueeler/Pool)

“None of the participants in the ‘peace forum’ knows what he is doing there and what his role is,”  Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s former president and now deputy chairman of the country’s Security Council, said. 

Brazil attended only as an “observer”. And in the end, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and South Africa all withheld their signatures from the summit communique, even though some contentious issues were omitted in the hope of drawing wider support.

Still, the conference provided Kyiv with a chance to showcase the support from Western allies that it says it needs to keep fighting against a far bigger enemy.

“We are responding to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine not only with a full-scale defence of human life, but also with full-scale diplomacy,” Mr Zelenskyy said.

Leaders including US Vice-President Kamala Harris, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron gathered at the mountaintop resort of Buergenstock.

US President Joe Biden, in Europe for other events last week, did not attend despite public invitations from Mr Zelenskyy.

The front lines in Ukraine have barely moved since the end of 2022, despite tens of thousands of dead on both sides in relentless trench warfare, the bloodiest fighting in Europe since World War II.

In her closing remarks, Swiss President Viola Amherd warned that the “road ahead is long and challenging”.

‘Things can’t go on like this’

After initial Ukrainian successes that saw Kyiv repel an assault on the capital and recapture territory in the war’s first year, a major Ukrainian counteroffensive using donated Western tanks fizzled last year.

Russian forces still hold a fifth of Ukraine and are again advancing, albeit slowly. No peace talks have been held for more than two years.

“We know that peace in Ukraine will not be achieved in one step, it will be a journey,” European Commission Chief Ursula von der Leyen said, calling for “patience and determination”.

“It was not a peace negotiation because [Russia’s President Vladimir] Putin is not serious about ending the war, he’s insisting on capitulation, he’s insisting on ceding Ukrainian territory — even territory that today is not occupied.”

 Volodymyr Zelenskyy walking in front of multiple nation's flags.

A number of countries withheld from signing the summit’s final statement. (Reuters: Michael Buholzer/Pool )

In the absence of a clear path to ending the war, Mr Zelenskyy emphasised practical issues, such as nuclear safety and securing food supplies from Ukraine, one of the world’s biggest grain exporters.

The summit’s final declaration called for Ukraine’s control over the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant and its Azov Sea ports to be restored. But in line with the conference’s more modest stated aims, it omitted tougher issues of what a post-war settlement for Ukraine might look like, whether Ukraine could join the NATO alliance or how troop withdrawals from both sides might work.

“The more allies that can be found to say ‘Things can’t go on like this’, ‘This is too much’, ‘That’s overstepping the mark’, that also increases the moral pressure on the Russian Federation,” Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said.

As Sunday’s talks turned towards issues of food security and nuclear power, some leaders left early.